this post was submitted on 18 Jul 2023
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For all the gags and unashamed silliness, however, the show has been built on solid science fiction foundations since it first materialized on the BBC in 1988. With "Doctor Who" on hiatus between 1989 and 2005, "Red Dwarf" became the highest profile sci-fi show on British T.V., and writers/creators Rob Grant and Doug Naylor frequently came up with concepts every bit as smart as those encountered by Jean-Luc Picard and co in "Star Trek: The Next Generation." That instinct for pushing the limits of the final frontier has continued since Grant departed the show following 1993's series VI.
Below we've pulled together 10 of the most sophisticated – and unconventional – sci-fi ideas from "Red Dwarf"'s epic 35-year history. And, it's worth noting that they've done it all without any alien visitations...
However, if you want to get your fill of creatures from outer space, then check out the best sci-fi movies and best T.V. shows of all time – you won't be disappointed!
In early seasons, Rimmer was unable to interact with solid objects, but the introduction of a "hard light" emitter in "Red Dwarf VI" episode "Legion" gave him physical form, emulating the solid light found in "Star Trek"'s holodecks, and making life a lot easier for actor Chris Barrie. Rimmer got another upgrade in 2020's feature-length "The Promised Land," thanks to a "diamond light" drive that briefly turned him into a superhero. This was a superlative evolution with one minor flaw – his battery life was shockingly bad.
We subsequently learned that, in the many millennia since "Cloister the Stupid" was frozen in time, those Felis sapiens had developed their own society, fought holy wars, and subsequently abandoned Red Dwarf to find the promised land of "Fuchal" (aka Fiji). Cat was one of those left behind, though the boys from the Dwarf did run into more of the species in "The Promised Land."
The crew have also encountered several cyborg Simulants (usually notable for their passionate dislike for humans) and a giant genetically-engineered "despair squid," whose ink could induce mass hallucinations ("Back to Reality"). Perhaps the most intriguing lifeform, however, was Legion, a "gestalt entity" with the ability to combine any mind in close proximity into a being with an intellect greater than the sum of its parts – who else could have created the wonder of anti-matter chopsticks?
Where "Star Trek: The Next Generation" generally used the holodeck to get away from it all, "Red Dwarf" has traditionally preferred virtual reality. Decades before metaverses became fashionable, the show was strapping the gang into artificial reality headsets, some of which looked more like bicycle helmets than anything like the cutting edge tech of the best VR headsets we have today.
From the game-gone-wrong of "Better than Life" to "Gunmen of the Apocalypse"'s Western-themed assault on a computer virus, the show has frequently explored the comedic potential of transporting yourself to another world. Best of the bunch, however, was "Back to Reality," in which the aforementioned despair squid caused the crew to hallucinate that they'd spent the last four years playing a total immersion videogame called "Red Dwarf." It's the most emotionally powerful episode in the show's history – and no, Cat does not want to be Duane Dibbley.
The backwards universe On one level, a world where time runs in reverse is simply an excuse for gags that would be impossible in any other sitcom – it's best not to think too hard about what going to the toilet would involve. Nonetheless, "Red Dwarf III"'s "Backwards" was also based on the ingenious sci-fi premise of an anti-universe, as Rimmer, Lister, the Cat, and service mechanoid Kryten (by this point a regular member of the crew) landed on a planet where time's arrow had been flipped. Christopher Nolan's "Tenet" riffed on similar ideas in 2020, though it was nowhere near as funny.
The Justice Field Science fiction loves finding cruel and unusual ways to incarcerate the worst of the worst, from "Superman: The Movie"'s two-dimensional Phantom Zone to "Escape from New York"'s abandoned Manhattan. But, few prisons are as ingenious as the facility in "Red Dwarf IV"'s "Justice," where committing any crime is impossible thanks to the site's in-built Justice Field.
Any criminal act you perform will instantly be inflicted back on you – in other words, when Lister tried setting some bed sheets alight, his own jacket quickly caught on fire. Luckily for the Dwarfers, they were able to turn the prison's unique security measures to their advantage, when they goaded the ruthless simulant on their tail into blasting himself to smithereens.
However, there were undoubted parallels with the anomaly that spewed anti-time into the universe in "The Next Generation" finale "All Good Things" (which debuted three years later). Indeed, it remains a shame that Jean-Luc Picard didn't follow Lister's lead, playing pool with planets to permanently seal the fissure. Trick shot!
Yes, it was incredibly convenient when Lister used a literal dose of good fortune to enter the correct door code to escape quarantine, and when he found all of the correct components to defeat a Rimmer driven insane by a nasty holo virus (alongside Mr. Flibble, his evil penguin hand puppet) . Even so, deus ex machina has rarely been so funny, or felt so justified in terms of the plot.
The whole scheme was part of Lister's destiny to form an unbreakable circle in time – the ouroboros symbol represents a snake eating its own tail – to ensure the human race never became extinct. It was also the reason why Lister subsequently sent himself a Father’s Day card every year ("Fathers and Suns").
Series X's "Entangled" paid homage to one of the more esoteric concepts in contemporary physics, when a "quantum rod" from the S.S. Trojan's drive system caused Kryten and the Cat to experience quantum entanglement on a macroscopic scale – and, in a beautifully choreographed sequence, they ended up mirroring their actions in perfect unison.
Writer Doug Naylor's interpretation of quantum theory probably wouldn't stand up to much scientific scrutiny, but, let's face it, you could frequently say the same of "Star Trek".